Bangkok Post

VR whale ride helps ease acrophobia

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People who had lived with a fear of heights for decades became less afraid after virtual reality (VR) therapy that saw them riding a flying whale, researcher­s said last week. A specialise­d team that included psychologi­sts and IT experts put confirmed acrophobes through their paces in a series of lifelike VR simulation­s, after which all reported “a reduction in fear”, they announced.

VR-based treatments, the team concluded, “have the potential to greatly increase treatment provision for mental health disorders”. With a virtual “coach” to guide people through treatment, the new method could offer a low-cost way of providing care to people who cannot afford or access a face-to-face therapist. The VR coach uses the recorded voice of an actor.

For the latest study, the team recruited 100 volunteers. To allow for comparison, half were given VR treatment, while the other half received no treatment interventi­on. This was the first VR phobia treatment not to require the presence of a real-life therapist, said the team. “We designed the treatment to be as imaginativ­e, entertaini­ng and easy to navigate as possible,” explained study leader Daniel Freeman of the University of Oxford’s psychiatry department.

Wearing goggles and tactile gloves while standing safely on firm ground, patients moved around a 3D world centred in the massive atrium of a computeris­ed, 10-storey office building. The pre-recorded, 30-minute programme sessions ran automatica­lly, with the virtual coach explaining what the participan­ts must do. Tasks included having to cross a rickety bridge, rescue a cat from a tree, perform tasks near the edge of a balcony, and ride a flying whale.

The outcome after several sessions exceeded the researcher­s’ expectatio­ns. In self-reported feedback, “over three-quarters of the participan­ts receiving the VR treatments showed at least a halving of their fear of heights”, said Freeman.

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